5 Bodies To Die For. Stephanie Bond

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5 Bodies To Die For - Stephanie  Bond

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The way I see it, the day has nowhere to go but up.”

      “Very funny. You’ll be in there with me, won’t you, Jack?”

      His mouth flattened into a line. “I’ll be watching. Just remember that you’re here of your own volition. You can stop the interview if you feel uncomfortable.”

      “You’re late,” chided a female voice.

      Carlotta turned to see Detective Maria Marquez approaching. The woman managed to look fresh yet threatening in a pale blue pantsuit and shoulder holster. Her demeanor toward Jack was territorial, but Carlotta wondered if Jack even noticed.

      “There was a mishap,” Jack said, pouring a cup of coffee.

      Maria eyed Carlotta knowingly. “Right. Well, the state guys are getting restless.”

      “How did your session go?” Jack asked, taking a drink from the steaming cup.

      Maria shrugged. “They asked questions, I answered.” Her glance cut to Carlotta, then back. “We can talk about it later.”

      Carlotta pursed her mouth. The woman was purposely excluding her, while letting her know that she and Jack had plenty of private time.

      “Did they offer up the state lab to process our evidence?” Jack asked.

      “When we get some.”

      Jack swallowed coffee and nodded. “Fair enough.”

      “They’re waiting for Carlotta in interview room two,” Maria offered, then walked away.

      Jack topped off his coffee and looked at Carlotta. “Ready?”

      “I guess so.”

      He led her down a hallway to a closed door. “I’ll be right on the other side of the glass. Just be truthful. Everyone’s after the same thing here—to get you cleared.”

      “And my father,” she added. But at the sight of the muscle jumping in Jack’s jaw, she frowned. “And my father, right, Jack?”

      “Carlotta, this is about you. Let your father take care of himself. From what I’ve seen, he’s pretty good at it.”

      He rapped his knuckles on the door, then opened it. Two suited men sat adjacent to each other at a rectangular table that was piled high with files. She assumed that one of them was Randolph’s, one was Wesley’s and one was hers. Her pulse kicked up a notch. The men stood and adjusted their waistbands as Carlotta and Jack walked in.

      “Agents Wick and Green,” Jack said, nodding to the slim black man and the stocky white guy, respectively, “this is Carlotta Wren.”

      The men said hello and she responded in kind.

      “Ms. Wren has agreed to voluntarily answer whatever questions you have about The Charmed Killer case. She’s eager to help, aren’t you, Carlotta?”

      She nodded, suddenly realizing that both men’s eyes were locked on her legs. Jack cleared his throat, and the men were suddenly all business.

      “Have a seat, Ms. Wren.”

      “Can we get you something to drink?”

      “No, thank you,” she said, lowering herself into the empty chair.

      Both agents looked at Jack expectantly.

      “I’ll be outside,” he said unnecessarily. After making eye contact with Carlotta, he backed out of the room.

      Once the door was closed, Agent Wick gave Carlotta a friendly smile and eased out of his jacket. “I’m originally from Buffalo and I haven’t acclimated to the Southern heat yet.”

      “I told him he’ll get used to it,” Agent Green said to her, as if he and she were on the same team and Wick was the outsider. Translation: Green—good cop, Wick—bad cop. They both sat down and made a great show of getting settled, adjusting ties, sipping coffee and scooting chairs closer to the table.

      Carlotta smiled. “I don’t mean to be rude, gentlemen, but I have to be at work soon, so…what can I do for you?”

      Wick pursed his mouth. “Okay, let’s do this.” He took a folder that Green passed to him and opened it. “What do you do for a living, Ms. Wren?”

      She glanced at the glass behind Wick and imagined Jack’s comforting presence behind it. “I’m a sales associate at Neiman Marcus at the Lenox Square Mall.”

      Green jotted down her answer. Apparently, he was the note-taker.

      “That’s where Michael Lane worked,” Wick said.

      Carlotta nodded. “Yes, that’s where I met Michael.”

      “You were friends?”

      “Yes. Good friends, actually.”

      “What changed that?”

      She shifted in her chair. “The night I realized he was behind an identity-theft ring and was responsible for the deaths of two women.”

      “You confronted him?”

      “That’s right. We were in the Fox Theater at the time, and he tried to kill me.”

      Wick took another sip of coffee. “How?”

      “By pushing me over a balcony.”

      “You obviously survived,” Green interrupted.

      “Yeah, I was lucky. Someone broke my fall.” She glanced at the glass again.

      “Have you seen Michael Lane since that time?” Wick resumed.

      “Only on television, after he escaped, when he was being chased by the police.”

      “I understand that when he jumped over the bridge, you were the one who informed the police that Michael couldn’t swim.”

      “That’s right, Michael once told me himself.”

      “So you assumed he’d died in the fall?”

      “Yes.”

      “But he didn’t.”

      She sighed—this was going to be tedious. “Apparently not. I found evidence that Michael Lane broke into the home I share with my brother and was living in our guest room, unbeknownst to us.”

      “That’s quite a story,” Wick said wryly.

      Carlotta didn’t respond.

      “Your brother,” Green broke in, glancing over the file in front of him. “That would be Wesley Wren?”

      “That’s correct.”

      “And both of you have records?” Wick asked, taking the file. “Your brother

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